MY TOP 10 METHODS TO EARN MONEY ONLINE
The following article details my personal top 10 methods to make
money from the Internet.
What makes this list unique is it’s based entirely on the methods
I have personally used, so I can reveal to you what I did and what my results
were. Bear in mind these methods represent ten years of working online, so I do
not do all of them presently. At one point in my career however they were an
income stream, and are still viable options for you.
This is not an all inclusive list, which means there are plenty of
other ways you can make money, no doubt many of which are potentially much more
profitable or better choices for your own situation. As a result you shouldn’t
base your decisions on what methods you use solely on this list. Do your
research and include this article as one resource.
This list isn’t strictly ordered based on my preferences from top
to bottom. What I’ve done is listed the different things I did in a chronology
of time of when I did them. It’s no coincidence however that as we get closer
to the present (the end of the list), the more I personally like the method,
and hence still use it. Over the years I made changes to how I made money in
order to get closer to what I really wanted from my business.
What Is My Ideal Way To Make Money Online?
To help you understand what I was striving for, here are my main
criteria when deciding what methods I use to make money online with. Bear in
mind certain options only became available as a result of previous experience.
Some things you can only do once you’ve done other things because you build on
what you have done before.
In a nutshell, this is the criteria I concluded are important to
me –
Can you make a solid profit
margin?
As you
will see in a moment when I reveal my top ten methods, some income streams have
very slim margins, which
means you must push through a lot of volume in order to make significant
income. While not always the case, in most situations to sell more requires
more work, more resources and generally more of everything, which results in
violation of my next rule…
Can you maintain the income
with minimal labour and/or is it easy to outsource?
I look for income streams that do not require significant amounts
of work to maintain. If I need to drastically increase the amount of product I
sell or customers I attract to make good money, and that requires more of my
own time to achieve, or cannot be easily outsourced to others (it often
increases your labor just to organize outsourcers, so don’t assume outsourcing
is a magic solution), that’s not the method for me.
Is there potential to
scale?
As per
the previous point, often the logistics of growth makes a method unappealing to
me, however I do want the income streams I go after to have the potential to
scale, and scale big. This means if you do discover something that makes you
money, the possibility to grow it to a life changing amount of
money is a
reality, and you understand how this can happen.
Is there passive income
potential?
In most
cases I prefer something that is more potentially passive than potentially
scalable. Obviously it’s great to have everything, but given the choice I
prefer income streams that just work and can be automated so you can do other
things. You have to be careful to manage your desire to scale something with
your desire to make it passive. Sometimes less is more because less gives you freedom.
Can you create a sellable
asset?
The final
point is really important to me because I know that my interest tends to
fluctuate. Every five years or so I feel like moving on to something new and
leaving my main project. In the case of business, I want to ensure that there
is a profitable exit strategy. The
better you meet the previous criteria (profit margin, automated, scaleable and
passive), the more money you can make when it is time to sell.
I Look For The “Holy Trinity” Income Method
I’ve
written before about my quest for the holy trinity of a business model, one that delivers what I
consider the three most important outcomes from a business –
1. You make significant PROFIT
2. The income can be made as close to PASSIVE as possible
3. You have PASSION about some aspect of the business
Or phrased another way, my business should enable the following –
1.
Consistent Income
2.
Free Time (thanks to income automation, business model simplicity or
large capital gain)
3.
Meaning and Purpose (development of your passion and reason for being on this
planet)
So now you know my main criteria that has driven me to test
different income streams over the past decade. Now let me introduce you to
exactly what those income streams are…
My Top 10 Ways To Make Money Online
1. Sell On Ebay
During my
pre-teen and early teenage years I went from playing with Transformers, GI-Joe
and LEGO, to playing Nintendo, Sega and Gameboy. Eventually I added the card
game Magic: The Gathering to the
mix at about 16 years of age. All of these things were passions for me at
various stages of growing up, but one thing remained consistent throughout each
stage; I traded and sold toys and games I no longer wanted to make extra cash.
In
Brisbane where I live, before the Internet there was a newspaper called the Trading Post that was published every two weeks. It was an
aftermarket for pretty much everything. Whenever I grew tired of a game or a
toy I’d sell it via the Trading Post, usually
in an effort to make enough money to buy the new toy or game I had in my
sights.
Eventually
the Internet came along and the Trading Post no longer commanded the secondhand market
like it once did (though it did successfully transition online). It quickly
became clear that eBay was the winner when it came to secondhand commerce
online. As a result my first experience making any money from the Internet was
selling old games, toys and electronics on eBay.
EBay is still I believe the best way to gain experience making money
from the Internet for two reasons –
1.
You are pretty much guaranteed to make
some kind of sale and thus experience a transaction
2.
EBay has the traffic, so you don’t have to
worry about marketing your product beyond creating a good listing, the
eye-balls are already there
These two reasons make eBay a great first stop because you will
learn how to list something for sale online, how to take money (possibly your
first experience with PayPal) and about the importance of things like titles
and copywriting, if you spend the time to study how to make your eBay listings
convert better.
The best
thing about eBay – the abundant traffic – is also the worst thing. Barriers to entry
are low on eBay, meaning competition is fierce. When competition is fierce,
profit margin is slim. Unless you can find some form of competitive advantage
through your supply chain, how you create listings, or you have a means to
increase volume, you’re not going retire rich thanks to eBay.
I spent quite a bit of time studying eBay, both as a business
model and as a means to capture new customers because of how much buying
traffic is there. There is no doubt that eBay is a fantastic website that
represents a huge potential to make money, but in my case I wasn’t keen to
build my business there, it didn’t match enough of my criteria.
However eBay is a fantastic way to make quick money, even just as
a way to turn your old items into cash to start a new online venture. If you’re
brand new to Internet marketing and you don’t know your PayPal’s from your
Clickbanks, or your PPC from your SEO, eBay is definitely a great place to
learn some basics.
2. Sell products in forums, bulletin boards, classifieds and other
community type sites
The card
game Magic: The Gathering was a big part of my life from the end of
highschool to the beginning of university. Although initially I was just a
casual player and then tournament player, I quickly became a card trader and
really enjoyed the wheeling and dealing. Although my interest in playing the
game wained, most of my early projects online were connected with the game.
Before having my own website, I spent time reading websites,
newsgroups, bulletin boards and forums about the game, and eventually started
trading online. Back before search engines were any good most of my time was
spent in particular Magic newsgroups, some that talked strategy, and some that
were focused specifically on trading and/or buying and selling cards.
I managed to make spare change selling my cards through these
sites. The main reason I could make any money was because I would win cards in
tournaments, hence I had a supply source that would result in a good profit
margin. Of course this wasn’t sustainable unless I kept placing well in
tournaments, nor was it really scalable unless I started buying in cards from
other sources.
I stopped using this method once I started my own card game site
(more on this below), however I still believe niche collectables, particularly
in a market that you really love, is a fantastic starting point to gain
experience making money online. Like eBay you can make money selling secondhand
items in community sites if you can find a way to source product at cost or
below. It’s not a model that has much margin so again the challenge is to scale
if you want to make significant profit.
3. Sell products from your own website
My first
successful website was about the card game Magic: The Gathering. At
first the site was just a hobby with articles written by me and a few friends.
Eventually as traffic grew I began making some money with the site.
Since I was already a card trader it made sense that my Magic site
have a Magic card store. At first I stocked the website with my own cards, and
eventually added retail “sealed” (unopened packs of cards) by buying product at
wholesale from a company in Sydney.
It was a very simple card shop made up of text listings of the
cards I had for sale, the quantity available and the cost per card or per pack.
I maintained the inventory myself from my room, sorting and listing cards
online by hand using plain text. I didn’t use any software and most of the
payments I received back then was via check or money order in the mail. Some
kids would even send money and even coins (!) in the mail to pay for their
purchase.
My business did well enough, although the manual labor was
intense. Maintaining inventory lists, packing cards into envelopes and daily
trips to the post office was not always the most fun way to spend my time,
though I did enjoy having my own little business while in university.
Unfortunately
my store was hit by credit card fraud when I foolishly sold a significant
amount of product to an unknown person in Thailand. This experience was enough
for me to decide that I had had enough of running a Magic shop and it was time
to move on. You can read about the credit card fraud experience here – Yaro
Starak Timeline – Part 2
Selling Products Online Is A Big Opportunity
My first three experiences of making money from the Internet all
involve some kind of physical product. Online commerce obviously represents a
huge opportunity to make money online, and having your own product or a passion
for a product that you can source can lead to big profits.
You can
sell product from your own website store, via community sites and classifieds
(like Craigslist) and of course eBay and
collectively make good money. The challenge, like with any business, is
defining what is your competitive advantage and can you come up with a model
that meets your needs. For me selling physical product was a great proving
ground, but I eventually learned that profiting from information was a
preferable model if I wanted to meet my aforementioned business goals.
I’ll leave it in your hands to decide whether physical commerce is
the way to go for your situation.
4. Sponsorship advertising on a content site
Once my card game site was successful I began researching how to
make money from it. I sold cards initially because I already knew there was a
market for that and I had the cards, but I was also aware that if I had an
audience I could charge sponsors money to advertise to them.
Thus
began my love affair with banner advertising.
Although challenging at times to find sponsors, I was quickly able
to bring in several hundred dollars per month in advertising revenue by
directly approaching online companies who I considered good targets for my
readership. I emailed them and asked if they would like to pay a monthly fee to
place a banner on my site. Most said no, but some said yes and eventually I had
a couple of loyal sponsors.
Banner income would prove very reliable over time as long as I
continued to do whatever I did to maintain and build a readership. This has
continued today, where several sponsors pay a fee to advertise their products
and services to you, the reader of this website.
Banner
advertising, when set up using a system like I presently use, can be very hands
off – in fact for me it’s entirely passive – assuming there is an audience that the
sponsors benefit from advertising to. It’s difficult to make loads and loads of
money just from banners unless you have significant traffic, but it is easy
enough to make some money from it and once you do, it generally proves very
reliable unless you stop updating your website.
I’d recommend this method to you if you have some kind of content
based site or a community site that attracts enough traffic to make it
worthwhile for sponsors. The best thing about banners is that they don’t have
to replace any other income method you use, you can use this income stream in
tandem with others.
5. Sell services you provide personally
At one stage early in my career when my online income wasn’t
consistent, I was part of a business grant program run by the Australian
government designed to assist entrepreneurs with money to pay for life’s
necessities so you can focus on growing your business. The idea is that when
your business is successful you will eventually hire people and pay taxes, thus
the government reaps a return on the investment.
The grant ran for 12 months and I was under the assumption
(incorrectly) that I had to show consistent income growth in order to maintain
my qualification for the program. My income at the time always suffered a
downturn around Christmas/Summer in Australia. To combat this problem I decided
to teach English face-to-face with people in Brisbane to hopefully boost my
reportable income.
To advertise my tutoring service I marketed using posters offline
and eventually set up a website and marketed on classified sites as well. I
charged $15 an hour and eventually had a few Korean clients. This idea
eventually ballooned into a full on English school with a real world premises
that I managed for eight months before closing down. It turned out to be an
experiment that taught me I much preferred online business to bricks and
mortar.
My English tutoring days were short lived, but that doesn’t mean
selling some kind of service that you personally deliver isn’t still a viable
option. The Internet is a fantastic place to market your services for free.
Similar to what I talked about in the first three points, you can use online
community sites, classified, forums and your own website to market your
service.
The downside
with this model is that you are still trading hours for dollars, which is a
violation of my holy trinity concept. It’s not necessarily the worst
option – and many people enjoy the life of a high-paid consultant very much –
but it does have the inherent limitation that a service is not replicable
unless you personally do it yourself or hire people to do it for you, both
activities that take time and/or resources.
If you are good at something and enjoy helping/teaching/working on
other people’s projects, selling what you do online is worth considering.
6. Sell services provided by other people
My next big success after my card game site was an online
proofreading business. For this business I wanted to focus on selling something
that did not require either my own labor or sourcing some kind of physical
product.
The
business began in very simple fashion. I created the website personally myself
and advertised two services – English proofreading and language translation services. I knew how to find contract
proofreaders and also had access to an online database of language translators.
When a job came through I’d organize a quote, slap on a margin for myself and
then return the quote to the client.
Over the
years I heavily refined this business. I brought on an assistant, simplified
the services, cemented a pricing
model and learned what
methods of marketing brought in the best type of client. The end result was a
full time income for me and barely a few hours of work to maintain it.
This was
the first time I found a business that met all my major criteria – except one –
I really wasn’t that passionate about the industry. Initially I enjoyed being
the entrepreneur, the thrill of making money and automating the business as
much as I could, but after a few years my passion wained. I eventually sold
the business, earning a nice payday in the process, making this one
of my most personally gratifying projects.
Selling a
service is a real option for making money online. The challenge is sourcing
good people to do the work, learning what specific offer to make to the market,
how to differentiate yourself so you earn good margins, how to market what you
offer and how to automate the entire process so it becomes a passive income stream.
7. Paid reviews
For a brief period on my blog I invited people to submit their
product, service or website for a paid review. This means they pay a fee (for
my site it was $250) and I would write an article about whatever they
submitted. I would not accept just anything for review, I had to see an angle
that made for relevant content for my audience. Nor was a paid review a promise
that I would write positively about the subject – I would highlight both good
and bad points.
Initially I didn’t mind writing paid reviews as the income was
pretty good in terms of how long it would take and how much I earned. I could
make as much as $250 an hour, which was great at first, but as my motivation
focused more on freedom and less on money, even this became a poor incentive. Plus
I never did like that I was told what to write about rather than choosing
subjects I enjoyed.
The challenge for you, if this method is relevant to your growth
stage, is to create a website where you can command a price for paid reviews
that makes it worth your time. Until your traffic is significant, charging more
than $50 for a review is not realistic, so you need to build your website asset
first.
8. Affiliate marketing
As my
blog audience grew I began to test a method of making money I was very interested
in – affiliate marketing. My
first test proved positive, though initially I was disappointed that of my
readership of 500 or so people (at the time), I could only sell one or two
products, making $20 commission each. It wasn’t retirement money, but it was a
start.
Affiliate
income has gone on to become my second highest source of income in recent
years, thanks in part to the increase in my audience reach. By combining my
blog and email newsletter I can reach thousands of people with just one piece
of content. By testing different products and recommending things I personally
use myself, I’ve been able to earn as much as $50,000 in commissions selling just one product.
Affiliate marketing is possibly the single best way to make a
living online because it is so hands off, can be automated easily enough and
can deliver some incredible profit margins. It’s especially good when you can
use affiliate marketing to recommend things in areas you are personally
interested in – for example you can make money simply writing a review of a
book you really wanted to read anyway and you get paid for doing what you love.
The challenge for you is figuring out what market(s) to enter,
building an audience and maintaining relationships with your readers so they
trust what you tell them. If you know something that other people want to know
and you are prepared to share that information, you could be looking at a
fairly lucrative affiliate opportunity.
9. Sell your own information products
The
single most profitable income stream I have ever developed is selling my own information products. If you
are a long time follower of my work you know I have created courses on how to
make money with blogs and membership sites. I also have several reports, an
ebook and new products on the way.
The profit margins on information products is significant,
especially as you can earn money for content you created years ago. Technology
makes selling information online relatively easy to automate, once you get
through the learning curve. If you focus on areas you are passionate about you
can build expertise and leverage that trust and credibility to make sales of
your products. Best of all, all of this can happen while you sleep, once you
have built the machine to do it for you.
I
personally enjoy teaching, so creating my products like Blog
Mastermindthough hard work, was an enjoyable process. Once the
course was created I continued to sell it year after year to people new to the
industry who want to learn how to make money with blogs.
Like with
affiliate marketing, your potential to succeed selling information products
rests on your ability to identify market needs, tap into audiences looking for
this information and then give them what they want. There are plenty of
subtleties and things to learn about, but thankfully there is plenty of guidance
out there too. Digging into the archives
of this blog you are
reading now and downloading my free reports – The
Blog Profits Blueprintand Membership
Site Masterplan are
fantastic starting points if you want more help.
10. High end private coaching
I’ll end
this article with something I only recently did – offer high end coaching to a
select group of clients who had to apply to work with me. My program cost
between $5,000 and $10,000 and I turned away more people than I
accepted. This was deliberate as I knew working one-on-one with people is not
something I can do with many people or I will use up all my time. However I was
keen to help certain people who were in the right position so I could learn
more about the challenges they face.
Private coaching, like consulting, is another situation where you
trade time for dollars, but in terms of your hourly pay rate it is hard to find
a higher paying “job”. Of course you don’t have to start off charging thousands
of dollars. Depending on your expertise and what kind of outcome you help
people achieve, will determine how much you can charge. Offering coaching for
$100 per session is not out of reach for most people, and that’s not a bad
starting rate if you are looking to build up your experience through helping
others closely.
Again the Internet is by far the easiest and most affordable tool
to attract coaching clients. In many cases you can add private coaching to many
of the other methods I listed above, including selling info products you
create, affiliate products, sponsorship banners and physical products.
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